Disease Model of GATA4 Mutation Reveals Transcription Factor Cooperativity in Human Cardiogenesis
Author(s) -
Yen-Sin Ang,
Renee N. Rivas,
Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro,
Rohith Srivas,
Janell Rivera,
Nicole R. Stone,
Karishma Pratt,
Tamer M Mohamed,
JiDong Fu,
C. Ian Spencer,
Nathaniel D. Tippens,
Molong Li,
Anil Narasimha,
Ethan Radzinsky,
Anita J. MoonGrady,
Haiyuan Yu,
Beth L. Pruitt,
M Snyder,
Deepak Srivastava
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2016.11.033
Subject(s) - gata4 , biology , missense mutation , enhancer , transcription factor , mutation , genetics , gata6 , microbiology and biotechnology , haploinsufficiency , gene , phenotype
Mutation of highly conserved residues in transcription factors may affect protein-protein or protein-DNA interactions, leading to gene network dysregulation and human disease. Human mutations in GATA4, a cardiogenic transcription factor, cause cardiac septal defects and cardiomyopathy. Here, iPS-derived cardiomyocytes from subjects with a heterozygous GATA4-G296S missense mutation showed impaired contractility, calcium handling, and metabolic activity. In human cardiomyocytes, GATA4 broadly co-occupied cardiac enhancers with TBX5, another transcription factor that causes septal defects when mutated. The GATA4-G296S mutation disrupted TBX5 recruitment, particularly to cardiac super-enhancers, concomitant with dysregulation of genes related to the phenotypic abnormalities, including cardiac septation. Conversely, the GATA4-G296S mutation led to failure of GATA4 and TBX5-mediated repression at non-cardiac genes and enhanced open chromatin states at endothelial/endocardial promoters. These results reveal how disease-causing missense mutations can disrupt transcriptional cooperativity, leading to aberrant chromatin states and cellular dysfunction, including those related to morphogenetic defects.
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